Beat the rise! Delivery fees are going up soon.

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Spatial Agency and Occupation

Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong

Evelyn Kwok (Research Assistant Professor, Hong Kong Baptist University)

$44.99

Paperback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Edinburgh University Press
30 April 2026
There are around 340,000 Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong, but the ways in which they experience migration is largely hidden in the homes of their employers. This book helps us to understand the complexities of migrant experiences by analysing the socio-spatial consequences that emerge from global migrant labour, and examining the capacity of the disenfranchised to create new spatialities by using public space to resist their disempowerment. This approach gives voice to a phenomenon silenced by the hegemony of mainstream urban economics and, in turn, reveals practices that cut across global labour. By shedding light on the importance of space in moulding these practices and how these practices, in turn, shape space, Kwok demonstrates the power and limits of spatial agency in pushing back against the deleterious consequences of considering labour as another commodity, and reveals what lies behind the curtain of Hong Kong's 'successful' spatial capitalism.
By:  
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781474479172
ISBN 10:   1474479170
Series:   Edinburgh Studies in Urban Political Economy
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Evelyn Kwok is Research Assistant Professor at the Academy of Visual Arts at the School of Creative Arts, Hong Kong Baptist University. Her background is in spatial design research, and her work focuses on the intersection of gender, labor and space, in particular on marginal communities in urban spaces and their use of public space. Her teaching integrates service learning and community advocacy into design and socially engaged art in interdisciplinary contexts within and beyond Hong Kong.

Reviews for Spatial Agency and Occupation: Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong

Spatial Agency and Occupation consolidates the trajectory of Evelyn Kwok’s highly original theorising and meticulous research on the intersections of space, economics, gender and labour for over a decade. A powerful and moving analysis of the discipline and marginalisation of female migrant workers with unique insights into their resilience and everyday resistance. Interdisciplinary scholarship at its best! -- Maggy Lee, The University of Hong Kong This is a remarkable book that provides valuable insights on migration, care, norms and the global political economy that shape the options, choices and experiences of Indonesian and Filipino migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong. Kwok deftly interweaves the historical and structural discourses with personal narratives, thereby deepening our understanding of the underlying power relations and contradictory outcomes of migration policies. Her exploration of these workers’ resourcefulness provides many food for thought regarding resilience and women’s agency. -- Maria S. Floro, American University, USA This book offers an exceptional contribution to the fields of both migration and urban studies, as well as a complement to ethnographies of home. Kwok exemplifies the ethnographic sensibility and sensitivity needed when writing about voices from the urban margins, without ignoring the limits and challenges of representing these voices. Here lies the tension that is palpable when teaching and doing research from the ‘margins’. How does one highlight the institutional structures that disempower and marginalize, while also illuminating the agency and resistance of the marginalized? By centering migrant domestic workers’ experiences, Kwok transcends the boundaries between the centre and the periphery, the private and the public, the permanent temporariness of domestic migrant workers’ legal status and their temporary, yet regular, enactment of agency through Sunday transformation of public spaces. -- Mahardhika Sjamsoe’oed Sadjad * Housing Studies *


See Also